The Reporter (Vacaville)

An artist preserves Wuhan’s COVID memories

- By Emily WAng FujiyAmA

Scribbled instructio­ns for incoming patients plastered on the window of a silent hospital reception counter. A lone worker in a hazmat suit, steadily spraying disinfecta­nt in an empty hospital hallway.

Such scenes from the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic in Wuhan — moments of fear and desperatio­n as well as unity and resilience — are etched in the mind of artist Yang Qian.

One year on, she is channeling those memories into artwork to preserve the memory of the central Chinese city’s 76-day lockdown that upturned the lives of some 11 million people. In a way, that’s an extension of her work as a volunteer delivering vital supplies to hospitals and residents during the traumatic period, while also reflecting the pride many residents take in having weathered the outbreak and draconian measures taken to bring it under control.

“To express what I’ve seen in a realistic way, this is the responsibi­lity I’ve given myself. I also hope that much of the history should not be forgotten,” Yang said.

A painter by trade, she felt helpless in the face of an unknown virus ravaging her beloved hometown in January 2020. Fear gripped the city as authoritie­s abruptly shut its residents in their

homes and froze transport links on Jan. 23.

Two days later, she began volunteeri­ng with a group delivering protective clothing, masks and other supplies around hospitals. Over the course of 4 months, she and a fellow volunteer delivered some 90,000 sets of protective clothing and around 450,000 face masks.

As she made her rounds, she took on requests from residents and strangers, delivering much needed supplies from medicine and disinfecta­nt to food. Sleep was at a premium as deliveries at times ran into the early morning hours.

Her first post-pandemic artwork, “Reception,” grew out of the experience of accompanyi­ng a mother and daughter to a hospital in early February. The two had developed COVID-19 symptoms after the father died at home from the disease and, desperate, took to social media

for help.

Yang saw the post and found a hospital willing to accept the pair, but was told that no ambulances were available.

With public transporta­tion closed, the only solution was to bicycle to the hospital, with Yang leading the way.

At the reception desk, she saw instructio­ns for new patients haphazardl­y taped on its window, some scribbled by hand. Stretched to their limit, hospital staff would point to the window instead of answering questions.

“It made me feel a kind of oppression, a kind of fear,” Yang said. “Everyone, especially the doctors, are spending time only to rescue patients.”

She meticulous­ly reproduced the scene in an oil painting, right down to its torn papers and scribbled notices.

A second oil painting followed based on a photograph of a worker disinfecti­ng a hospital hallway, rendered in shadowy hues of deep blue and black.

“It is in such a severe situation (but) even in this atmosphere, there are still people who stand up for us and protect us,” Yang said.

Soon after sending the mother-daughter pair to hospital, Yang came down with a fever and cough and feared she had the virus. In tears, she went to a hospital to get tested and began writing her will. After what she calls the longest hour of her life waiting for the results, she was given the allclear.

One year on, Wuhan has largely returned to normal, its streets bustling with shoppers, its nightclubs throbbing until dawn and pensioners dancing to a Chinese rendition of a Katy Perry song along the neon-lit Yangtze River. Only the face masks that residents dutifully wear provide a visual reminder of the pandemic’s impact.

“What I see is the unity of our city, our nation. I find that I am really very proud of being a Chinese” Yang said, expressing a widely held sentiment that has been strongly encouraged by the government, which some have accused of mishandlin­g the initial stage of the outbreak and allowing it to spread around the world.

An exhibition she organized last year at a gallery she runs brought together 23 artists with 60 pieces of artwork related to the coronaviru­s.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chinese artist Yang Qian using dots to recreate an aerial view of Wuhan, China, under lockdown at her studio in Wuhan in central China’s Hubei province on Jan. 24.
NG HAN GUAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chinese artist Yang Qian using dots to recreate an aerial view of Wuhan, China, under lockdown at her studio in Wuhan in central China’s Hubei province on Jan. 24.

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